"Incredibly rare" ancient purple dye that was once worth more than gold found in U.K.

Kerry Breen Kerry Breen | 05-04 02:28

Archaeologists working in England found a "mysterious lump" of a purple substance that in Roman times would have been worth more than gold, researchers said in a news release. 

The researchers who found the "soft purple substance" are working on a yearslong investigation of Roman remains in Carlisle, England, a cathedral city in the center of the country. The dig is being led by Wardell Armstrong, an environmental, engineering and mining company based in the U.K. 

The substance was found during a 2023 excavation of a Roman bathhouse. The remains of the third-century building exist on the grounds of what is now a cricket club, according to the news release. 

The team worked with the British Geological Society to test the material. Experts from Newcastle University provided further analysis and determined that it is an organic pigment containing levels of bromine and beeswax, according to the release. 

These ingredients allowed researchers to identify the substance as "Tyrian Purple," the color that the Roman Empire associated with its imperial court. The pigment is made from thousands of crushed seashells from the Mediterranean, North Africa and Morocco, according to the release, and was "phenomenally difficult" to make and expensive to produce, making it worth more than gold at the time. 

The discovery of the material has led researchers to believe that the building under excavation was related to the court and may have even meant that the Roman emperor at the time, Septimius Severus, had visited Carlisle. Frank Giecco, the technical director of the organization leading the excavation project, said it is an "incredibly rare" find, especially in Europe. 

"It's the only example we know of in Northern Europe – possibly the only example of a solid sample of the pigment in the form of unused paint pigment anywhere in the Roman Empire," Giecco said in the release. "Examples have been found of it in wall paintings (like in Pompeii) and some high status painted coffins from the Roman province of Egypt."


ALSO READ

How compassion, not just free tuition, helped one Ohio student achieve his college dreams

Toledo, Ohio — A little over four years ago, seniors at Scott High School in Toledo, Ohio, walked in...

us | 6 hours ago

Adani wind energy project challenged in Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court 

Adani Green Energy’s wind energy project, coming up in Sri Lanka’s northern Mannar and Pooneryn dist...

world | 6 hours ago

Ukraine says Russian advance pushing ahead as Putin blames Kyiv

Russian forces were pressing ahead on Friday with their offensive in north-east Ukraine as President...

world | 6 hours ago

US military says first aid shipment has been driven across a newly built US pier into the Gaza Strip

Trucks carrying badly needed aid for the Gaza Strip rolled across a newly built U.S. pier and into t...

world | 6 hours ago

Important for India to attend Swiss Conference, play role in conveying message to Russia: Swiss Foreign Secretary Fasel

India has not “determined its attendance” at next month’s Ukraine Peace Conference in Switzerland, r...

world | 6 hours ago

‘China-Russia partnership is not directed against anyone’

Russian President Vladimir Putin concluded a two-day visit to China on Friday, emphasising the count...

world | 6 hours ago